Two of the most intriguing points Pressfield made about Resistance were:

“Rationalization is Resistance’s spin doctor. Resistance presents us with a series of plausible, rational justifications for why we shouldn’t do our work.” (See my list above.) “What’s particularly insidious about the rationalizations that Resistance presents to us is that a lot of them are true.” (The majority of tasks on my list above needed to get done.) But, Pressfield insists, we can do what needs to be done and do our work. Resistance just does a good job of convincing us that everything on our to-do list is more important than our creative work and therefore must come first.

Pressfield introduced me to the Principle of Priority, which states: “a) you must know the difference between what is urgent and what is important, and b) you must do what is important first.” What’s important, Pressfield wants us to hear, is the work—the daily, creative work to which we are called that makes us and the world better. “That’s the game we have to suit up for every day,” Pressfield writes, “that’s the field on which we need to leave everything we’ve got.”

I also appreciated Pressfield’s description of what Resistance feels like. As a writer, he wakes up “with a gnawing sensation of dissatisfaction. Already, I feel fear. Already, the loved ones around me are starting to fade. I interact. I’m present. But I’m not. I am aware of Resistance. I feel it in my guts. I afford it the utmost respect, because I know it can defeat me on any given day as easily as the need for a drink can overcome an alcoholic.”

This daily battle with Resistance resonates because it has beaten me so many times, allowing me to excuse myself from my writing. Pressfield’s clear characterization of Resistance is helpful, then, in discerning what the enemy looks and feels like, as well as the weapons Resistance uses against us. Resistance keeps us from being the creators we were always meant to be.